Author |
: Alicia Chester |
Publisher |
: |
Total Pages |
: 0 |
Release |
: 2022 |
ISBN-10 |
: OCLC:1381858846 |
ISBN-13 |
: |
Rating |
: 4/5 (46 Downloads) |
Synopsis Study Nature, Not Books by : Alicia Chester
"This dissertation is about photography, souls, minds, and brains. It follows a genealogy of photography from portraits of psychiatric patients in the mid-nineteenth century to brain imaging in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, during which time photographic technologies have been utilized in the service of Western medicine for experimental, diagnostic, and educational purposes. Specifically, psychiatry and neurology evolved in tandem with photographic technologies, and I contend that photography was used not only literally as a tool but also became a model for materialism. Photography was heuristically devised to visualize theories of the mind and brain as well as their interrelations when these entities could not be studied empirically or, in other words, be seen. The dissertation comprises three chapters. Beginning with portraits of female psychiatric patients by Dr. Hugh Welch Diamond at the Surrey County Lunatic Asylum in England between 1848 and 1858, the first two chapters look at medical practices of photographing the surface of the body to record signs of mental and neurological illness. A respected early photographer in his own right, Diamond strove to capture "the movements of the soul" as shown on the faces of his patients. The second chapter encompasses the years between 1862 and 1880, first looking at Duchenne de Boulogne's anatomical studies of emotional expression using electricity and photography and then examining how early photographs of hysterical patients under the care of Duchenne's mentee, Jean-Martin Charcot, at the Salpêtrière in Paris operated as temporal samples of the disease. The third chapter on the Harvey Cushing Brain Tumor Registry at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, with materials from 1902 to 1938, marks the penetration of imaging into the interior of the body in attempts to directly visualize illness and biological aberrations. Cushing had virtually all of his patients photographed over the course of his career as a neurosurgeon, and he integrated these portraits alongside X-rays and other forms of visualization to form a fuller picture of illness, taking his cue from the maxim "study nature, not books" to study and visualize as much as possible first-hand. The conclusive coda moves away from photography to MRI and fMRI in the latetwentieth and early twenty-first centuries. While not photographic, I contend that MRI technologies have inherited the evidential belief and truth value associated with photography. The common thread running through the chapters is each historical period's desire to visualize illness in order to categorize, diagnose, treat, and educate?that is, to create knowledge by way of seeing. The co-evolution of psychiatry and neurology with photographic technologies offers a means to understand the accompanying shift in the philosophical relationship of mind to body. As psychiatry and neurology developed into independent professions in the latter half of the nineteenth century, photographic materiality served as a model for thinking about mind and body. Early in photographic history, Cartesian dualism still held that mind (i.e., soul) and body were separate, interacting entities. By the turn of the twentieth century, materialism, or the idea that the mind is a product of the brain, which, in turn, is part of the body, held full sway. The technological movement from photographing the body's exterior as a means of reading internal states of the mind (as in the cases of psychiatric and hysterical patients) to imaging the interior of the body itself (as in the cases of X-rays and MRI) occurred concomitantly with the epistemological shift from deciphering facial expressions and external bodily attitudes for clues about the mind to localizing specific areas of the brain as physical sites of psychological states. Photography was at the center of this shift from exterior to interior and mirrored the connected philosophical shift from dualism to materialism. Photography's pull toward the physical was fully part of this transition of thought, and photographic materiality led to theories about the invisible workings of the mind and memory, especially as they related to the physical functioning of the brain. The materialism of photography paralleled the materialism of the mind and body. In becoming the tool enabling the creation of psychiatric and neurological images, photographic technology shaped the desire for vision to penetrate ever-deeper into the physical body to view something quite immaterial: the mind."--Pages vi-viii.